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Nadal digs deep to subdue Roddick

LONDON, November 23, – Rafael Nadal had to dig deep before finally securing a hard-fought 3-6, 7-6 (7/5), 6-4 win over Andy Roddick in the ATP World Tour Finals on Monday.

Nadal has spent much of a remarkably successful season sweeping opponents aside with consummate ease, but the world number one was pushed to the brink in his opening match of the prestigious end-of-year event at London’s O2 Arena.

The Spaniard was playing for the first time in five weeks after resting a shoulder injury and he initially looked a little rusty as Roddick took the first set.

But the 24-year-old eventually found the remorseless rhythm that has crushed so many top players and he battled back to ensure a winning start to his bid to land the Tour Finals crown for the first time.

Nadal said: "I was a little bit lucky tonight. I started the match a little bit nervous after five weeks without playing and made too many mistakes at the beginning.

"I was very close to losing but the positive thing is I finished the match playing much better and that’s good for my mentality.

"I can play with a little bit more calm in the next match and even if I lose I still have chances to be in the semis."

Roddick added: "I came out of the gates aggressively and I think it caught him by surprise. He definitely wasn’t settled comfortably. He was missing more balls than normal.

"The difference was he found his range on his forehand in the second and third sets.

"The two points I feel won him the match were when he hit two really good second serve returns there in the breaker."

Nadal crashed out in the group stages last year after losing all three matches and readily admits that lacklustre effort represented one of the lowests moment of his career.

His recovery since then has been stunning. In the space of 12 months, Nadal has reasserted himself as the sport’s pre-eminent force by winning the French Open and Wimbledon titles, lifting a first US Open crown and returning to the top of the world rankings.

Yet Nadal’s unique brand of poise and power has never translated well to indoor tournaments. He has won only one roofed event and he made a slow start here.

He had a golden opportunity when he earned two break points in the opening game, but Roddick saved both and seemed energised by that escape act.

The American had beaten Nadal in their last meeting in Miami earlier this year and he applied pressure on the Spaniard’s serve with some searing returns that earned the first break.

When Nadal responded by unloading those ferocious top-spun forehands that so often crush opponents into submission, he found Roddick in obdurate mood.

Roddick, a three-time finalist across south London at Wimbledon, saved two break points in the fifth game to build a 4-1 lead and Nadal was unable to make any further impact on his powerful serve as the former US Open champion closed out the set.

Roddick had a chance to take complete control when he broke in the third game of the second set.

But Nadal has never been one to throw in the towel and he finally found some rhythm to break straight back. That proved to be the turning point.

The set went to a tie-break and both had chances to take the initiative before Nadal seized control with a stunning double-handed winner that whistled across court before catching the line.

Nadal didn’t waste the opportunity and sealed the set when Roddick miscued a forehand into the net.

This was a real heavyweight clash as both men strained every sinew to deliver the knockout blow in the final set.

Given his tremendous success this year, it was inevitable it would be Nadal who came up with the right combination to down his opponent.

A sublime cross-court winner earned a break for a 3-2 lead and Nadal, now full of fist-pumping defiance, refused to surrender that advantage as he served out the match to join Novak Djokovic at the top of Group A.